Acharya Prashant explains that people often struggle to give because they lack a 'giver's heart,' which only develops when the mind connects with the ultimate giver. He defines a saint as one who embodies the qualities of the formless, such as boundless love, generosity, and joy. A true saint lives in bliss and gives without hesitation or a sense of loss, unlike ordinary people who often donate only what is useless to them or expect something in return. He emphasizes that true giving is the sacrifice of the ego and the things that sustain it. Accumulation is the root of the ego, and non-possession or sharing is necessary to dissolve it. He further distinguishes between gross and subtle forms of giving. While material items like clothes require a beggar to receive them, subtle impurities like lust and mental filth require a Guru. Acharya Prashant describes the Guru as a mechanism, much like Shri Shiva, who can absorb the 'poison' or mental filth of the disciple without being corrupted by it. He notes that while people think the Guru gives, it is actually the disciple who must give up their internal baggage. However, the ego resists this exposure and vulnerability. He concludes by explaining that practices like daily reporting are methods for disciples to 'donate' their daily mental accumulations and toxins to the Guru to find healing, yet many resist out of a false fear of losing themselves.